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April 13, 2012

Movie Review ~ American Reunion

by Joe Movie Review • Tags: AmericanR, Biggs, Hannigan, Hurwitz, LEvy, logo, Lyonne, Pie, Reid, Reunion, Schlossberg, Scott, Universal

The Facts:

Synopsis: Jim, Michelle, Stifler, and their friends reunite in East Great Falls, Michigan for their high school reunion.

Stars: Jason Biggs, Alyson Hannigan, Seann William Scott, Eugene Levy, Tara Reid, Chris Klein, Thomas Ian Nicholas, Eddie Kay Thomas

Director: Jon Hurwitz, Hayden Schlossberg

Rated: R

Running Length: 113 minutes

Random Crew Highlight: Music Preparation ~ Victor Pesavento

TMMM Score: (2/10)

Review:  The pie has officially gone bad.

In this fourth big screen entry (and EIGHTH overall if you count direct to video sequels) of the American Pie franchise, we are treated to more eye-rolling antics from Jim and his clown-car classmates.  To say everyone was on auto-pilot to their destination would be suggesting there was a direction planned in the first place.  What we end up with is a tired and embarrassing “final” entry in a series that started out with a naïve charm that made it so popular.

After the disastrous American Wedding I would have thought that Universal gave the Pie-makers their walking papers.  Never underestimate the power of a franchise extender, though and in these tough movie-going times the execs must have thought the public was clamoring for another outing.  Even if they were, this movie serves us leftovers of a pie with a lot of crust and no filling.  Usually with sequels that stretch out over a decade our characters grow and learn…but not these guys.  Everyone in the movie basically plays the exact same stunted characters they’ve played since the 1999 original.  Efforts to give them depth or challenge them are laughable at best, painful at worst.

Our graduates of East Great Falls high are now a little rounder and more Botox-ed as they return to their 13 Year Class reunion (first joke fail of the evening my friends).  Jim (Biggs) and band camp flute lover Michelle (moon faced and moony voiced Hannigan) are the parents of a toddler and what do you know it…they find that having a kid has changed their marriage!  For some crazy reason (ie because it says so in the script) they want to try to work things out over the weekend they are going to be spending with their friends…and then they get mad at each other when they never have time alone.  Hmmm…I don’t see a pivotal plot point the entire movie hinges on coming my way…do you?

They are joined by…well…just Jim’s friends since obviously Michelle’s band friends were played by extras long since committed to their shifts at Culver’s.  Nicholas has spent the years between films growing a really interesting beard and Klein wisely sat the last film out so he’s back making up for his absence.  Klein by now should be a better actor than he is.  Out of the limelight with substance abuse problems he’s back with a vengeance…in the interviews I’ve seen him in he’s sincere to the point of a psychotic break and that carries over into the film.  Everything he says, does, feels is acted out by his eyebrows and forehead.  As Finch, Thomas is so bloated you want to give him a water pill.  I almost hate to mention Scott’s Stifler because the character is so unlikable it’s hard to imagine why anyone would remain friends with him.  We all had friends in high school that we stuck with knowing we’d leave them in the dust once we threw our caps in the air.  Stiffler’s man-child antics would surely please less discerning viewers but for this reviewer it’s a big miss.

Wait a second…the poster indicates that Reid and Natasha Lyonne are part of this mix as well.  Fooled ya!  Reid has next to nothing to do and is not even given the decency of closure to her character.  Lyonne is dealt a worse blow by showing up in the last 15 minutes and given three lines that any other actor onscreen could have done.  I’m not kidding…one of the lines is something like “Kevin, Vicky is looking for you and she’s really upset”. 

So what’s good about this?  Not a lot really but if I had to pick something I’d focus on Mena Suvari and the adults.  Suvari will never add an Oscar to her mantle but here she’s the one actor that seems ready to admit she’s doing it for the money.  She knows it’s a dog of a film and grits her teeth through several awful dialogue exchanges with Klein and a rough haircut. 

The best part of all of these films (including the few direct to video ones I’ve also suffered through) is Levy as, simply, Jim’s Dad.  While the character has gotten a bit broader the movie takes shape when he’s on screen.  His scenes in Reunion are all too brief but pay attention while he’s there…he makes the experience more bearable than it probably should be.  Jennifer Coolidge’s role is expanded here and she and Levy get the best laugh of the whole movie…during the credits.  Let’s just say I finally released a laugh at a joke involving a popcorn tub.

Special mention goes out to a cameo near the end…I don’t want to give it away.  Oh forget it…I’m gonna do it.  It’s Rebecca De Mornay as Finch’s mom and she looks absolutely amazing.  I wish she’d had more to do…and a better movie to do it in.

As this is supposedly the final piece of the Pie there’s a go-for-broke attitude about the film.  The gags are grosser but poorly staged, the nudity is maxed out for all its worth.  One girl goes topless for an extended period of time that actually had me wondering what her mother will think when she sees it.  Oh..and Biggs decides now is the time to do full frontal nudity.  Ready to plunk your money down yet?

The humor here isn’t even sophomoric…it’s grade school and it’s a laughless affair handled by kids that have been out in the sun at recess too long.

In a review full of pie puns I’ll leave you with one last one: Pass on this under baked slice of Reunion pie.

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April 13, 2012

The Silver Bullet ~ “Bel Ami” Trailer

by Joe Silver Bullet - Trailer Park • Tags: Ami, Bel, Colm, logo, Magnolia, Meaney, Pattinson, Ricci, Scott, thomas, Thurman, Trailer

Synopsis: A chronicle of a young man’s rise to power in Paris via his manipulation of the city’s most influential and wealthy women.

Release Date: itunes – May 4, 2012 // in theaters – June 8, 2012

Thoughts:  Robert Pattinson so desperately wants to break out of the Twilight shadow and I’m wondering if he might not be in a tad over his head here.  The films he has made outside of the vampire saga have all been dramatic and heavy pieces and it looks to be no different here.  What I think would help Pattinson out better is for him to look for a romantic comedy to, um, sink his teeth into.  While the film itself looks polished and posh, he is surrounded by actors who will make a meal out of him in the scenery chewing departments.  Uma Thurman started off in period drama ala Dangerous Liaisons and it’s nice to see her back on screen playing though her voice seems to be going the Annette Bening husky route.  Kristen Scott Thomas (so good in the recent Salmon Fishing in the Yemen) returns to drama with what looks to be a strong dramatic turn.  Pairing Pattinson with Christina Ricci is a gamble…Ricci is a strong actress with the right co-star but she can quickly turn whiny at the drop of a hat.  I don’t know about you but I’m a little starved for a good period drama with a wicked edge so Bel Ami on the whole hold some interest for me.  Whether Pattinson acquits himself here is yet to be determined but here’s hoping he continues to stretch outside of his comfort zone.

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April 13, 2012

Movie Review ~ Titanic: 3D

1
by Joe Movie Review • Tags: 3D, Cameron, Celine, DiCaprio, Dion, Dreams, Fox, Go, Heart, Horner, Jack, logo, On, Paramount, Paxton, PaxtonS, Rose, Ship, Stuart, Studio, Titanic, Will, winslet

The Facts:

Synopsis: A boy and a girl from differing social backgrounds meet during the ill-fated maiden voyage of the RMS Titanic.

Stars: Leonardo DiCaprio, Kate Winslet, Billy Zane, Frances Fisher, Kathy Bates, Gloria Stuart, Bill Paxton

Director: James Cameron

Rated: PG-13

Running Length: 194 minutes

Random Crew Highlight:  Special Effects Makeup: Old Rose ~Greg Cannom

TMMM Score: (9.5/10)

Review: If you are a fuddy-duddy who still clams to hate this movie you can stop reading right now.  I’ll have another review up soon that you can read but I know I’m not going to change your mind about Titanic.  What I find most interesting about the people that don’t like this is that most of them haven’t even seen it!  I can understand why this wouldn’t appeal to everyone but as someone who loves a good epic and who is fascinated with the history of the ill-fated ship, I continue to be a big fan.

Fuddy-duddys…are you gone?

OK…let’s proceed.

15 years after it was released and became a box-office phenomenon Titanic is back with an 18 million dollar 3D facelift and the results are pretty great.  I’ve seen the movie twice in the last week and both viewings provided very different experiences.  As we move forward in the review I’ll speak about a few key differences I noticed between the two showings.

Here’s my first piece of advice…while it might be nice to see this from the comfort of your own home or the VIP seats at the ICON I’m going to go against my usual recommendation and advise you to see this at an IMAX 3D theater (Southdale or Rosedale).  On IMAX screens the sound was better, the picture was clearer, and the scope of Cameron’s vision was more vividly on display.  

Some slight special effects quibbles aside (sometimes in long shots the actors look like SIMS), the last decade and a half have been quite good to Titanic.  The 3D is utilized quite well in giving the ship depth and making you feel more a part of the action.  It’s not clunky or gimmicky but really illustrates all the work and research that went into recreating the time and place that this ship existed.  If anything, the 3D was more self-serving on Cameron’s part than an outright method of making the film more money than it already had. (Cameron’s own Avatar replaced it as the highest grossing movie of all time.)

What’s still so hard to believe was that Titanic was rumored to be a bomb before it came out.  Delayed from a summer opening because the effects weren’t done, there were whispers that the film was in trouble and out of control.   Keep in mind this was before the rampant rise of the anonymous tipster and leaked early screening reviews.  In fact, MN was the first place that Titanic was screened under a huge veil of secrecy (was anyone reading this at that screening?) and Cameron has stated that several pieces of feedback he received here influenced the shape the picture.  The movie finally arrived in December of 1997 and the rest is history.

It had been years since I’d seen the film again in full so I was excited to have another chance to experience Titanic all over again.  It just so happened that I double booked myself into seeing it twice within three days – but that turned out to be just fine with me as the movie still maintains a great pace making 194 minutes sail by.

Shot before they were true A-List stars, DiCaprio and Winslet were clearly on their way up the Hollywood ladder when they were selected to star in Titanic.  Both had Oscar nominations under their belt and Winslet would nab another nomination for her work here.  I’m not the biggest fan of DiCaprio’s later work but he was unjustly ignored for a nomination here…Winslet’s incredible but she doesn’t do it all alone.  I can probably see why she was recognized over him but that’s not to say his performance wasn’t nomination-worthy.  The only other actor to find herself with an Oscar nomination was Stuart playing Winslet as an old woman.  Stuart’s performance seems a bit shaky after all these years but she does have several memorable moments – as the catalyst for kicking the story off she works well with what Cameron was going for.

The chemistry between DiCaprio and Winslet’s Jack and Rose is stronger than ever and even though we might know the two were more like brother and sister offscreen they seemed perfectly matched here.  Maybe they don’t smolder as much as they could but it’s clear why the two are drawn to each other and how their brief time together influences how their story ends up.

Cameron is really a master at creating epics with two or three subplots that could be movies themselves.  In True Lies, the central storyline is pretty much abandoned for the subplot revolving around Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jamie Lee Curtis’s fractured marriage.  Right when you’ve forgotten you were seeing a spy actioner Cameron snaps you back to reality and ties the storylines together.  That’s true for Titanic as well.  The film starts in one place, veers to another for an extended amount of time and then watches as both plotlines intersect and move forward as one. 

The only problem I really have with Cameron the screenwriter is his tendency to let the actors narrate what they are doing as they are doing it.  It’s almost as if he doesn’t think the audience will keep up with him and maybe he’s right.  Still, I highly doubt that anyone needs to hear DiCaprio and Winslet both utter the lines “This water is cold!”…I think we probably already guessed that.  I want to go on record as saying that I still hate the spitting scene…it’s gross and even if it does set-up something later it’s never been my favorite.  Plus, it’s clearly ad-libbed and Winslet/DiCaprio aren’t very good at it.  Also not very good: Danny Nucci’s terrible Italian accent.  It’s as if all he had to practice with was a recording of “That’s Amore.”

Supporting characters are key in Cameron’s films as well.  From Paxton’s surfer guy delivery (actually…doesn’t he always talk like that) to Fisher’s sinister turn as Winslet’s mother to Zane’s almost cartoony villain there is no archetype left on land.  Best of all is Bates as the “Unsinkable” Molly Brown.  In a role originally intended for Reba McEntire, Bates makes every moment count like the pro she is.  Various others fill out their duties as passengers and crew of the doomed ship and each carve out their roles quite well…it’s a melting pot of accents and styles but it does all work in the end.

The effects are glorious here as is James Horner’s much lampooned score.  One probably can’t get away with reviewing this without mentioning “My Heart Will Go On” and Celine Dion’s performance of it.  Again, remember that before it was playing in every elevator and being sung by every drunk girl at karaoke it was a bona fide power ballad that actually did go on and on.  Listening to it as used in the movie, it’s free of the vocal melisma Dion would start to apply to it in concerts to change it up.  I also enjoy that the theme is used in several key spots to highlight a particularly romantic section of the movie.

Even though Cameron took a few giant liberties with the story, his attention to detail is what really pushes this film into the timeless classic territory.  Endlessly and obsessively researched, you can see this is a labor of love for him…a true passion project.  When a director invests that much of himself into the mix it can be hard to be subjective but I think what’s in the movie is perfectly placed and well executed. 

Is a return trip to Titanic worthy just to see it in 3D?  Yes, actually, it is.  It deservedly won 11 of the 14 Oscars it was nominated for and from a technical standpoint alone it’s required viewing in my book.  You can fast forward through the slightly overly saccharine middle section if you must but there is good work to be seen here.  I especially think it’s interesting to have seen this as a teenager and now seeing it again as a true blue adult.  I reacted differently to it this time around and found myself paying attention to the sadness of it all rather than the grand epic-ness during its initial release.

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